You just put a huge light bulb above my head. Thanks so much. I'm confident that this program of yours for learning Spanish will help propel me further into getting better at speaking Spanish. Thanks again. I appreciate it. 😊
Hace 23 meses que empiezo a estudiar el español y nunca había aprendido jamás un idioma. El proceso que usaba yo era lo mismo del leer un libro. Al principio, deslicé por todo la gramática para comprender la forma de leer y no para entender a utilizarla. Al mismo tiempo hacía yo una lista del vocabulario empezando con solo una palabra. Cuandoquiera estudiaría, cada palabra tuvo que ver con un imagen o un movimiento. El secreto para pensar en el español es para ver, oír, oler, tocar y saborear en el español. El cerebro no puede aprender a otra manera de los sentidos. ¿Solo una palabra? Sí, pero ahora, la lista tiene 14.000 entradas y de verdad, sé todas en la memoria de largo plazo. También, tengo 58 años y tengo el acento de España porque voy allá cuando me jubile. Si tuviera consejos, debería decir que los cognados son enemigos y nunca se tendría un acento perfecto en el español con estos como la herramienta primera.
@@LoneSch0lar007 I pictured words going across his mind as a phrase or maybe even subtitles during a song. I'm not sure. I found it quite useful as well.
Great video! I had felt frustrated because I couldn't "think" in my L2. I loved the explanation that it is a process. First it's thinking in English and translating, then thinking in English and chunks of L2, then eventually thinking more and more in L2 without the English. I'm starting the seven step program today! Thank you!!
I just started to watch this video. You covered step one and it sounded good and interesting. Then when you began step two, I thought: wow, there is really something to this method! I am going to save this, watch and take notes and get it right! Thanks, now back to watching your video with much excitement and appreciation. Thanks!!
This sounds fantastic, but it also seems way beyond my beginner level. So my question is if there is a way to apply this method from the very start of learning Spanish with rudimentary sentences. The obstacle is that i don't know how to subtly alter a sentence, since i don't know other tenses or enough vocabulary yet. ¿Tienes recomendaciones?
Good question. I do recommend getting to a lower-intermediate level first, i.e. beyond about Episode 60 or 70 in the LearnCraft Spanish Podcast. The good news is that at that level, you'll already be modifying sentences really effectively, in a wide variety!
@@learncraftspanishGracias. ¿Dónde está él podcast? Is this podcast a playlist of UA-cam videos? Or do I find the podcast elsewhere online? (I just discovered your channel here on UA-cam this week.)
@@dianadiehl It's an audio podcast so it's not on UA-cam, but you can find it in Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or online here: www.learncraftspanish.com/podcast
I would highly recommend trying LearnCraft's Spanish in one Month Challenge. It begins using Spanglish which helps you right off then less English as it goes on until it is totally Spanish. The thing I really liked was it shows you sentence structure and gives you templates for making sentences. Go to the website and check it out. It's the best method I have ever tried
4:06 let's dive in and look at these 7 steps. Holy getting to the point Batman. 4:20 we hear the first step your team discovered. I'm gonna guess it's called over-learning. Kinda been around for 1,000 years. Then step 2 is called substitution. Step 3 Is the Gap principal.. meditation Is good. In the end it was a good program that is the only way to achieve fluency. Thanks but please cut the intro to 30 seconds not 4½ minutes. 👍
You're right, we didn't invent anything in this video! Just putting those components together in a single repeatable framework. Instead of throwing theoretical jargon at people we've found much more success by just providing a clear "how-to" system.
And actually I strongly recommend *against* over-learning - instead, I recommend learning just well enough to remember, then stepping away for long enough that you almost forget. Another book I recommend, called "Make It Stick", explains why forgetting can actually be more beneficial than overlearning.
3:20 you finally get around to the point. That's a bit slow. Is your course that slow? Not meaning to be rude but ... 🙄. At 3:40 your still saying we have to do the 7 steps, crikey! just tell us. Now at 3:48 your telling how your team read s book about it. 😆
Right, it was a long intro but I would have felt bad if I hadn't given credit to Barbara Oakley - wouldn't want to look like I was stealing her idea without shouting her out.
@@learncraftspanishGreat way to break down everything. Keep your flow!!! Newcomers have time to gain an understanding rather than the logic being rushed. #kudos
You can skip the first 4:20 That’s when the lesson starts. Very good stuff
Thanks for this video guide in learning Spanish, because I have reach a plateau level (a stage where your become stagnant).
You just put a huge light bulb above my head. Thanks so much. I'm confident that this program of yours for learning Spanish will help propel me further into getting better at speaking Spanish. Thanks again. I appreciate it. 😊
Are you better???
I always welcome your study techniques. Thank you!
Thanks for watching!
Hace 23 meses que empiezo a estudiar el español y nunca había aprendido jamás un idioma. El proceso que usaba yo era lo mismo del leer un libro. Al principio, deslicé por todo la gramática para comprender la forma de leer y no para entender a utilizarla. Al mismo tiempo hacía yo una lista del vocabulario empezando con solo una palabra. Cuandoquiera estudiaría, cada palabra tuvo que ver con un imagen o un movimiento. El secreto para pensar en el español es para ver, oír, oler, tocar y saborear en el español. El cerebro no puede aprender a otra manera de los sentidos. ¿Solo una palabra? Sí, pero ahora, la lista tiene 14.000 entradas y de verdad, sé todas en la memoria de largo plazo. También, tengo 58 años y tengo el acento de España porque voy allá cuando me jubile. Si tuviera consejos, debería decir que los cognados son enemigos y nunca se tendría un acento perfecto en el español con estos como la herramienta primera.
Can you explain associating word with an image or movement?
@@LoneSch0lar007 I pictured words going across his mind as a phrase or maybe even subtitles during a song. I'm not sure. I found it quite useful as well.
Very interesting, but I wish you would have condenses the first four minutes into one minute. Definitely will try this. Thanks.
We're re-doing the video with this suggestion. :) Thanks
Love this video very practical
Thank You love your teaching😂🎉
Great video! I had felt frustrated because I couldn't "think" in my L2. I loved the explanation that it is a process. First it's thinking in English and translating, then thinking in English and chunks of L2, then eventually thinking more and more in L2 without the English. I'm starting the seven step program today! Thank you!!
Good luck and let me know how it goes!
I just started to watch this video. You covered step one and it sounded good and interesting. Then when you began step two, I thought: wow, there is really something to this method! I am going to save this, watch and take notes and get it right! Thanks, now back to watching your video with much excitement and appreciation. Thanks!!
This sounds fantastic, but it also seems way beyond my beginner level. So my question is if there is a way to apply this method from the very start of learning Spanish with rudimentary sentences. The obstacle is that i don't know how to subtly alter a sentence, since i don't know other tenses or enough vocabulary yet. ¿Tienes recomendaciones?
Good question. I do recommend getting to a lower-intermediate level first, i.e. beyond about Episode 60 or 70 in the LearnCraft Spanish Podcast. The good news is that at that level, you'll already be modifying sentences really effectively, in a wide variety!
@@learncraftspanishGracias. ¿Dónde está él podcast? Is this podcast a playlist of UA-cam videos? Or do I find the podcast elsewhere online? (I just discovered your channel here on UA-cam this week.)
@@dianadiehl It's an audio podcast so it's not on UA-cam, but you can find it in Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or online here: www.learncraftspanish.com/podcast
I would highly recommend trying LearnCraft's Spanish in one Month Challenge. It begins using Spanglish which helps you right off then less English as it goes on until it is totally Spanish. The thing I really liked was it shows you sentence structure and gives you templates for making sentences. Go to the website and check it out. It's the best method I have ever tried
¿Como comes?
¿Como como como?
es muy raro no entender a un extranjero aunque use palabras poco frecuentes
4:06 let's dive in and look at these 7 steps. Holy getting to the point Batman. 4:20 we hear the first step your team discovered. I'm gonna guess it's called over-learning. Kinda been around for 1,000 years. Then step 2 is called substitution. Step 3 Is the Gap principal.. meditation Is good. In the end it was a good program that is the only way to achieve fluency. Thanks but please cut the intro to 30 seconds not 4½ minutes. 👍
You're right, we didn't invent anything in this video! Just putting those components together in a single repeatable framework. Instead of throwing theoretical jargon at people we've found much more success by just providing a clear "how-to" system.
And actually I strongly recommend *against* over-learning - instead, I recommend learning just well enough to remember, then stepping away for long enough that you almost forget. Another book I recommend, called "Make It Stick", explains why forgetting can actually be more beneficial than overlearning.
Jajaja
3:20 you finally get around to the point. That's a bit slow. Is your course that slow? Not meaning to be rude but ... 🙄. At 3:40 your still saying we have to do the 7 steps, crikey! just tell us. Now at 3:48 your telling how your team read s book about it. 😆
Right, it was a long intro but I would have felt bad if I hadn't given credit to Barbara Oakley - wouldn't want to look like I was stealing her idea without shouting her out.
@@learncraftspanishGreat way to break down everything. Keep your flow!!! Newcomers have time to gain an understanding rather than the logic being rushed. #kudos
You guys are so negative. Have some decency